Trucker caught up in unofficial group's child sex sting in Willington

Alex Wood, Journal Inquirer, Manchester, Conn.
·3 min read

May 11—UNOFFICIAL STING

DEFENDANT: Shawn M. Arnold, 45, of Auburn, Maine

CHARGES: Attempted second-degree sexual assault, attempted risk of injury to a child, enticing a minor via computer

STATUS: Held on $100,000 bond, due back in court June 18

INVESTIGATED BY: East Coast Predators, an unofficial group

The truck driver who is accused of trying to entice a fictitious 15-year-old boy to have sex with him fell into a sting set up by an unofficial group that notified state police only after members confronted him with video cameras in hand at a Willington truck stop on Sunday.

The truck driver — Shawn M. Arnold, 45, of Auburn, Maine — told troopers that he intended only to hang out and watch movies with the 15-year-old, according to a report by Trooper Donshea Holmes.

But, in a sworn, written statement to police he admitted that, using a social media application, he explicitly discussed plans for sexual intercourse with the person he believed was the boy, according to the trooper's report.

Arnold was arraigned Monday in Vernon Superior Court on felony charges of attempted second-degree sexual assault, attempted risk of injury to a child, and enticing a minor via computer. Attempted second-degree sexual assault carries nine months to 20 years in prison.

During the arraignment, Judge Hope C. Seeley reduced Arnold's bond from the $250,000 set at the time of his arrest Sunday to $100,000 and continued his case to June 18. He was an inmate at the Hartford Correctional Center today, online state Department of Correction records indicated, although a bail bondsman was in court Monday to try to arrange his bond.

The group that set up the sting at the T.A. truck stop at 327 Ruby Road in Willington calls itself East Coast Predators and uses multiple dating sites to catch child predators, two of its members told troopers. Holmes' report doesn't identify the group members but does list their dates of birth, indicating that they are 27 and 23 years old, respectively.

The profile they set up on the social media application was of an 18-year-old, but the group members said they told Arnold through communications on the app that the person was actually 15.

Arnold said in his police statement that his first message to the supposed 18-year-old read, "hello handsome." He went on to say that he explained he was a truck driver from Maine and was at the Willington truck stop.

When the person said he was 15, rather than 18, Arnold replied "that I am cool with that and that I am still interested in him," according to his statement. He said he went on to ask about the boy's preferences in sexual activity.

He said he then asked the person if he wanted to have sexual intercourse and received the reply, "I think we can try."

Arnold said the person went on to talk about how he had to be home by 8 p.m. because his parents would be back at 9:30 p.m. to 10 p.m. and that he was using a ride sharing service to get to the truck stop.

When two men confronted him with a video camera, Arnold said, he tried at first to get away from them as they followed him and harassed him. But he said he eventually walked out of the truck stop building and talked to them.

He said they asked him if he thought it was right to meet a 15-year-old and the he replied that "for friendship that it really does not matter." He said the men then forced him to call his parents and tell them he was there to meet a 15-year-old.

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